This is an appeal from an order of the District Court denying without a hearing appellant’s motion to vacate his criminal sentence under the provisions of Section 2255, Title 28, U.S.Code (1958).
In this case, as in Thomas v. United States, 1959, 106 U.S.App.D.C. -,
Although relief under Section 2255 is not open to the appellant,
1
we must nevertheless read his petition to determine whether under any view of it he is entitled to relief on some other basis. Considering his petition as one in habeas corpus, we are also bound by authority to deny that remedy because the prisoner is not actually serving the sentence he attacks. McNally v. Hill, 1934,
Appellant’s counsel further urges us to view the petition as one invoking the ancient writ of error
coram nobis,
and to grant a hearing on that ground. We agree with counsel that relief in the nature of
coram nobis
can for appropriate reasons be invoked to review a sentence which petitioner has not yet started to serve. This court so held in the Thomas case, supra. Such relief, if it is available at all, is allowable “without limitation of time.” United States v. Morgan, 1954,
Here petitioner had counsel at his trial, and he does not assert that counsel’s representation was so ineffective as to deprive him of his rights under the Sixth Amendment. 3 In substance, he claims, rather, that his rights against self incrimination and to a fair trial were violated because (1) he was unlawfully arrested without a warrant, (2) evidence secured from him and others subsequent to his illegal arrest and in violation of Fed.R.Crim.P. 5(a), 18 U.S. C., was introduced at trial, (3) the trial court refused to grant severance, with the result that evidence was presented against his co-defendants which was prejudicial to him, and (4) certain police officers committed perjury in denying that appellant had been arrested without a warrant.
The first three allegations appellant makes go simply to the circumstances of his arrest and detention and to the conduct of the trial. Assuming their truth, they are clearly insufficient as grounds for
coram nobis.
As to the fourth allegation, appellant does not claim that perjured evidence formed the basis of his conviction. Such a claim might perhaps be grounds for
coram nobis.
See Tinkoff v. United States, 7 Cir., 1942,
*533
Appellant’s allegations taken separately do not constitute a basis for
coram
nobis; taken together they do not show a lack of a fair trial or the sort of miscarriage of justice which might call for immediate relief. In Thomas, we held that the relief there sought and the grounds therefor were “both cognizable within the scope of the common law writ of error
coram nobis.”
Accordingly, we remanded that case to the District Court for further proceedings in which the court would consider the petition as an application for relief in the nature of
coram nobis.
In contrast, we find in this case that the petition is insufficient on its face as an application for
coram nobis,
assuming all its allegations to be true. In such circumstances there is no basis for a remand, and we must affirm the denial of relief. Cf. Adams v. United States, 1955,
Affirmed.
Notes
. We intimate no opinion, of course, as to tlie sufficiency of the petition as a basis for relief under Section 2255, were that section now available.
. Rule 60(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C., provides in part that “Writs of coram nobis * * * are abolished, and the procedure for obtaining any relief from a judgment shall be by motion as prescribed in these rules or by an independent action.” The Supreme Court in Morgan, supra, held that by virtue of the all-writs section of the Judicial Code, 28 U.S.C. § 1651(a), the Federal courts could take cognizance of a “motion in the nature of a
coram nobis.”
. We do not mean to infer, of course, that such an allegation would necessarily require relief in the nature of
coram nobis.
Cf. Mitchell v. United States,
